He also made other types of ceramics, among them copies of Dutch Delft and Raku wares. |
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There will be contests of unusual ceramics, exhibitions of the products and ceramic ware for sale at bargain prices. |
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The question is whether ceramics known as gabbroic pottery, including Trevisker ware, include gabbro-rock minerals added as a temper. |
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There, in addition to painting in oil and watercolor and making sculpture and furniture, he often worked as a decorator of ceramics. |
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There, he has lived for the past 30 years, mastering lithography, oil painting, watercolor, gouache, drawing, engraving, sculpture and ceramics. |
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Machines called jiggers and jolleys are used to make tableware in ceramics factories. |
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The event is a juried show with 150 artists who show original artwork ranging in media from jewelry to ceramics to watercolor. |
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As the rugs, baskets, ceramics, katsinas, etc., etc., etc. quickly sell, Opice must get the sales information into his database. |
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Franklin's recognition of ceramics and silver as potent symbols of worldly success rang true. |
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Also under investigation as possible container materials are certain types of refractory ceramics. |
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The chapters are on silks, carpets, ceramics, glass, bookbinding and lacquer, and inlaid brass work. |
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These include lacquerware, ink block prints, and ceramics, all of which employ distinctive themes developed by Vietnamese artists. |
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Compounds which are used for advanced ceramics include aluminum oxide and zirconia. |
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She furthered Hopi and Zuni art in the Southwest, working in ceramics and silver. |
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Wax is most commonly used in ceramics to form a resist where one does not want glaze. |
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Demand for these wares abated before the Civil War but soon antiquarians and collectors began to search out examples of these patriotic ceramics. |
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She studied Graphic Art in Munich and during a three year-stay in California continued work-study in aquarelle, printing and ceramics. |
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However, the exhibition was composed of a conservative mixture of artisanal objects heavily weighted toward jewelry, ceramics, and glass. |
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It features a wide variety of arts and crafts including ceramics, furniture, jewellery and painting. |
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Therefore, the lightest, low-maintenance brake discs, made of carbon-fibre reinforced ceramics, are a real alternative to steel in this segment. |
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They are found carved in rock, ceramics, clay tablets, mosaics, manuscripts, stone patterns, turf, hedges, and cathedral pavements. |
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There is a very comprehensive range of ceramics, from fabulous tableware to quirky characters and conceptual and exploratory pieces. |
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Jill is building up the number of galleries stocking her work and hopes to be able to sell her ceramics by mail order catalogue soon. |
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He makes sculptures out of clay and bakes them into ceramics in his hometown in Shandong Province. |
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Historically ceramics production was widely dispersed, its main branches being brick and tile, pottery and porcelain manufacture. |
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They tend to be solid objects made of plastics, metals, and ceramics held together by screws, clips, adhesives, and heat seals. |
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An extraordinary number of masterworks were produced in book design, ceramics, furniture, glass, jewelry metalwork, prints, and textiles. |
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Contemporary art theories have challenged students to explore the materiality of ceramics. |
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I went to the market and I was in heaven, what with all the ceramics and woodwork and basketry and textiles and silverwork and everything. |
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Carvings, batiks, basketry, jewelry, ceramics, and other indigenous crafts are made largely for sale to tourists. |
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A shower room is situated between these two bedrooms and is tiled in ornate ceramics. |
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Offered a choice of ceramics, woodwork and metalwork, she elected to work in metal. |
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The South American country is seeking the return of some 4,900 artefacts from the Inca citadel, including ceramics, cloths and metalwork. |
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Conservation-Restoration of antique clocks, antique furniture, books and library material, ceramics and related materials and fine metalwork. |
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The 142 objects on view include paintings, works on paper, ceramics, metalwork, glass, furniture, and textiles made in the seventeenth century. |
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Approximately 1,300 objects will be on show, including ceramics, glass, metalwork, furniture, costume and textiles, toys and dolls' houses. |
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In the crude form kaolin has limited uses, however beneficiated kaolin is widely used in the paper industry, in ceramics and in paint. |
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As well as cadmium in batteries, handsets can contain plastics, ceramics, copper, flame retardants, nickel, zinc, silver and other metals. |
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Cummins determined that zirconia ceramics solved most of the basic problems generated in this harsh tribological environment. |
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She also wrote two books on ceramics and was an authority on Art Deco and modernist ceramics. |
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All the same, busy foyer ceramics and florid room furnishings suggest a resort ripe for refurbishment. |
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Bells can be hollowed from wood or made from glass or ceramics, but most are cast or forged from metal. |
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There are also dozens of sculptures, ceramics, photographs, installations and multi-media. |
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In Siraj's ceramics, this body is in clay, bearing several forms and colours within it. |
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The ceramics section has dealt with processes for clay body formulation for various uses. |
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Ms Hawthorne has collected many types of bells, from the best bone china, through to ceramics and souvenir brass pieces. |
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Other media, such as pottery, ceramics, bronzes, sculptures and three-dimensional art, grace the gallery's floors. |
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The old folder your grandpa used to keep in his pocket has evolved into a high-tech tool made from titanium, carbon fiber and ceramics. |
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The 12 volunteers have worked in a variety of mediums including oil paint, watercolours, prints, sculpture, textile, ceramics and text. |
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The exhibition features a stunning array of sculpture, using welded metal, carved wood, ceramics and experimental media. |
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This was a school that looked to the ceramics of Picasso rather than the functional stoneware pottery of Bernard Leach. |
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All surfaces including walls, windows, ceilings, floors and ceramics should be tested. |
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The most common ceramics to be found in Indonesia are green-glazed wares, conventionally called celadon. |
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Korean craftspeople are also known for their celadon ceramics, a term that refers to a type of greenish glaze that originated in China. |
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The Nicaraguan tradition of producing utilitarian and decorative ceramics and earthenware continues. |
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May I add a note to Kenneth E. Silver's sterling article on Picasso's ceramics? |
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The Hopis were producers as well, manufacturing large quantities of cotton cloth and ceramics for the trade. |
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The production of ceramics is located in areas where clay with a high percentage of kaolin is available. |
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The ceramics of Josiah Wedgwood and Josiah Spode also date back to that time. |
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Tucked away throughout the city, tiny workshops turn out delicate ceramics, lacquer ware and exquisite folding fans. |
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Waterford Wedgwood is expected to invest in troubled British ceramics maker Royal Doulton to prevent the dilution of its stake. |
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The arched cupboards flanking the fireplace held the silver and best ceramics and glass in the house. |
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Her ceramics were made with clay that was baked in a kiln to make it permanent. |
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Included in the show are carpets, ceramics, lacquerware, metal works and book arts. |
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There has never been a better time to invest in certain types of furniture, silver, clocks, ceramics and glass. |
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Jill's ceramics are unfussy with clean, with minimalist lines and simple curves. |
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Apart from chests and jugs, investors also love to collect clocks, silverware and ceramics. |
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Thousands of artworks, ranging from painting to glassware, ceramics and sculpture, are up for grabs. |
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The Institute is also planning to add new courses like photography, sculpture, pottery, glass ware and ceramics soon. |
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Yet despite his great affinity with the art of ceramics, pottery wasn't Tony's first career choice. |
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In Rhode Island, I taught a ceramics course for master's degree candidates. |
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I feared her cunning, her strength, the way she could manipulate me like clay in ceramics class. |
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In her spare time she has taken up crochet and ceramics, while finalising plans for her latest business ventures and the return of St Martha. |
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The role of Pablo Picasso in the world of ceramics has recently been the subject of scholarly inquiry and of exhibitions. |
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Faenza is a city that has always been involved in ceramics and is famous for its pottery. |
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The craft of ceramics has been cosying up to the art world for a long time. |
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The clay is the material that gives ceramics the ability to be molded and worked into various shapes and forms. |
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If you are still using soft ceramics to produce shapeless clay jars or bowls, you are lagging behind the city's latest trend. |
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Well, we're probably all used to the use of ceramics in white wares and are very familiar with those. |
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Such nanocrystalline ceramics are particularly hard, but they're brittle and fracture easily. |
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Both Altham and Shatrov argue that the Keronite process is superior to hard anodizing and plasma spray ceramics. |
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The excavations have exposed two Norman rubbish pits containing twelfth-century ceramics and animal bones. |
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He charged that the underwater ceramics were excavated and treated unprofessionally by the salvage companies. |
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In each unit, the artist superimposes an outlined figure onto elaborate floral designs borrowed from Ottoman ceramics. |
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On display will be a selection of paintings, ceramics and textile arts all of which will be on sale. |
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Practitioners of ikebana and chanoyu have for centuries created an enormous demand and appreciation for ceramics. |
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Arita, Imari and other Japanese ceramics were very popular in the Netherlands and in other European countries. |
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In addition to being used as a semiconductor in photoelectric cells and copy machines, selenium is also used in ceramics, glass, and medicine. |
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Clearly these were heavily influenced by Chinese ceramics emanating from the east. |
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They work in a variety of disciplines including ceramics, fibres, glass, mirror design, jewellery and photography. |
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Kaolin today is used in making paper, plastics, rubber, paints, fibreglass, ceramics, some foods, sunscreen lotion, and many other products. |
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The show includes everything from original fine art and limited editions to ceramics and jewelry. |
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My paintings and ceramics come from research on India's cynical notion of time and continuance. |
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Both of these pieces of equipment were good investments for future use in ceramics classes. |
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Glass ceramics are used for range tops, counter tops, dinnerware, and cookware. |
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Heaps of local wares will be on display including pottery, ceramics, jewellery, handmade cards, ironwork, felt and furniture. |
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Among the goods for sale will be jewellery, rural arts such as corn dollies, soft toys, paintings, furniture, textiles, glass and ceramics. |
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Chinese porcelains produced for export are among the most revered of all ceramics. |
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The congenial figurines combine favored features of extant ceramics with postures and expressions of enhanced fluidity and liveliness. |
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Later imitators did produce high temperature ceramics using such fluxes, such as bone porcelain, like Beleek. |
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Local artists and craftspeople would be offered exhibition space and jewellery, ceramics and paintings, would be for sale. |
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The future is looking bright for the talented craftswoman who recently exhibited at the prestigious ceramics event. |
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A tool that already existed for decorating ceramics, a rouletting wheel is similar to a pie crimper in both appearance and function. |
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It is an aesthetic glorified by ancient Greeks in their ceramics, Romans in their friezes and Renaissance artists in their sculptures. |
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We found his crucibles and cupels, ceramics that these people used to test rocks to see if they contained any precious metals. |
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The elegant sculptures in bronze, white metal and ceramics were the cynosure of connoisseurs. |
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Concentrations of prehistoric ceramics and debitage were noted in two areas that campers had disturbed by clearing and leveling tent sites. |
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It sells ceramics, glass, silver, paper and pretty much anything that takes her fancy. |
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And, as mentioned earlier, the ceramics are sexy, with their curves and protuberances and hidden spaces. |
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Although there are exceptions, most Chinese ceramics can be categorized by reign marks, seal marks and emblems. |
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Venetian ceramics, textiles, sculpture, enamels and glass will also be on view. |
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The ceramics trade was very profitable for Asian and European traders, especially the Dutch. |
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Observations of superplasticity in metals, ceramics, intermetallics, and laminates are thoroughly described. |
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Japanese bronzes, enamels, and ceramics of the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries inspired new vase shapes for European ceramicists including Doat. |
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These holdings are complemented by a select number of important baroque ceramics, most of which are large-scale pieces made of terracotta, earthenware, or porcelain. |
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To this fusion are added Gothic style elements in the legs, colorful French ceramics with a Moorish flavor, and exotic serpents on either side of the ceramic cylinder. |
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Other industrial activities include oil refining, and the manufacture of cement, gunnysacks, fertilizer, paper, glass, ceramics, and agricultural implements. |
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Traditional Lebanese crafts include basketry, carpet weaving, ceramics and pottery, copper-and metalworking, embroidery, glass-blowing, and gold-and silversmithing. |
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In alumina ceramics, what is the function of the ceramic component? |
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In the last third of the seventh century, when Byzantium definitively lost its African possessions, ceramics and amphorae from the Aegean and from the east become predominant. |
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A vast range of products will be available, ranging from fine art and framing to design-oriented furniture, cosmetics, ceramics, glass and tableware. |
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Samcuia's Africa is cobbled together from tribal carvings, San rock art, Mission school linocuts and the foliate designs seen in African ceramics and printed fabrics. |
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New adapted material systems like natural fiber composites, hybrid structures of metals, polymers and ceramics increasingly gain meaning in future. |
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The five books under review here are different in kind from most previous nontechnical ceramics books, which have been either hagiographic or reportorial. |
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The bottle can be made of clay or ceramics and hardened in an oven. |
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A painter and writer, he has also worked in graphics and ceramics, taught art, illustrated books, and written fiction both for children and adults. |
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Unfortunately, because of the destruction of central government control and increasingly chaotic conditions, production of Khmer ceramics ceased by the end of 13th Century. |
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It was a time when large numbers of women and antiquarians were collecting ceramics, chiefly the refined wares used in America during the colonial and early Federal periods. |
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The elegant sculptures in bronze, white metal and ceramics by Raj Kumar Panwar and his wife Pushpa Devi of Delhi were the cynosure of connoisseurs. |
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The most famous of British art deco designers, Cliff was born in Stoke on Trent in 1899 and left school at 13 to work as an apprentice enameller in a local ceramics factory. |
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With ceramics, the purely decorative is its default position. |
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The second part of the article about Japanese ceramics is about Arita, Kakiemon, Fukugawa, Kutani, Satsuma, Banko Earthenware and Satsuma pottery. |
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Here, under labyrinthine covered arches, one can buy items as varied as ceramics, carpets, silver, brass, miniatures, tiles, saffron, pistachio nuts and henna. |
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The role of ceramics in building chronologies and as signifiers of cultural similarity single this artifact category out as a prime focus for archaeometric research. |
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Unlike the ceramics produced in other parts of the country, the ceramics from Sitiwinangun are rich in embossed decorations with various floral and plant motifs. |
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For us to make good ceramics we need to heat them and use a lot of fuel. |
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The exhibition is on view until December 31 and includes ceramics, bone and metal implements, goblets, pitchers, fragments of marionettes, and Chinese porcelain. |
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The abalone shell is twice as tough as our high-tech ceramics. |
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Depending on their taste and pocketbooks, eighteenth-century Americans could use punch bowls made in a variety of materials other than ceramics and glass. |
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Studies of ceramics and other commodities show a substantial drop in imports and dominance of markets by such British centres of production as the Oxfordshire potteries. |
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The Beijing-born lecturer in ceramics at Shanghai University still invests his chairs with decorative swirls of Chinese calligraphy, affirming his Chinese heritage. |
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The exhibition should appeal to anyone with an interest in art or garden design, and you don't have to be the Lord of the Manor to display ceramics or stoneware. |
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The exhibition provides endless proof of refinements of beauty in textiles and architecture, woodwork and metalwork, ceramics and miniature painting. |
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They also saw no link between leukaemia and living near businesses such as those dealing with aluminium, plastic, wood, metalwork, printing works and ceramics. |
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At York City Art Gallery you can find out all about the science of pottery and ceramics or learn how the development of pigments changed the history of art. |
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You may also make money collecting antique ceramics and glassware. |
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Alan Coutts, a leading UK ceramics collector and dealer, believes that Scottish collectables and antiques are providing a welcome alternative to lacklustre pension plans. |
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Other potential sources of lead include fishing-line weights, metal weights in curtains, antique ceramics, leaded glass, and water from pipes with lead solder. |
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The only way we know how to make ceramics is high temperature kilns. |
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Her interest in Chinese armorial ceramics is longstanding, and is matched by research into the collecting of Chinese art in the West in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. |
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Archaeologists note a dramatic adoption of Tiwanaku ceramics into the cultures which became part of the Tiwanaku empire. |
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Twenty years later we understand styles, themes and trade routes of Medieval Greek ceramics. |
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Di Buckland's Message Sticks was an amusing piece which was a further reminder that ceramics today speak with many voices. |
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This met the requirements of the ceramics industry and extended the reserves of high potassium feldspar ore available to the Monticello facility. |
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Sharply carinated shoulders that separate a long neck from a rounded body characterise the ceramics from this horizon. |
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The reaction is known as a thermite reaction, and is used to weld metal together or create ceramics. |
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Katharine Morling is one of the UK's leading young fine art ceramics makers. |
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Anorthosite, a greyish to whitish fine-grained rock, is used in glass, ceramics, metallurgical and filler applications. |
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Variety of vendors featuring jewelry, Steampunk clothing, art, ceramics, etc. |
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The images discussed include memorial steles, ceramics, metalwork, stone carving, textiles, and manuscripts. |
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Tumanov, Solid solution formation at the sintering of hydroxyapatite fluorapatite ceramics. |
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Of course the ceramics aren't all teacups and pots, but also wall installations, large stabiles, still-life arrangements, tiles and more. |
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The study of flocculation is important in a wide variety of applications, such as nondrip paints, extruded ceramics, and emulsions. |
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This technique can be applied to ceramics with plaster or paper, slip and underglazes. |
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The company produces very high grade industrial ceramics including alumina, cordierite, mullite and zirconia, etc. |
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The company produces very high-grade industrial ceramics including alumina, cordierite, mullite, and zirconia, etc. |
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This chapter also analyses the granules of high-porosity materials such as foam, cordierite and ceramics. |
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Many of his extensive collection of 18th and 19th Century creamware ceramics feature sailing ships and historical scenes. |
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The compositional diversity of Cypriot ceramics can largely be understood in terms of the complex geology of Cyprus. |
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Paint-your-own ceramics studios are a chill way to express yourself while learning more about your date's right brain. |
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Superconducting ceramics produced by this technique have excellent levitative properties. |
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The ceramics industry in Bangladesh is a prominent player in the international ceramics trade. |
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Other galleries on the upper floors are devoted to its Japanese, Korean, painting and calligraphy, and Chinese ceramics collections. |
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The Royal Porcelain Factory is famous for the quality of its ceramics and export products worldwide. |
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It includes fields as varied as architecture, calligraphy, painting, and ceramics, among others. |
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Since the beginning of civilization people have used stone and ceramics and, later, metals found on or close to the Earth's surface. |
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Coins, some of which coined in Lusitanian land, as well as numerous pieces of ceramics were also found. |
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The Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery houses a collection encompassing natural history, archaeology, local glassware, Chinese ceramics and art. |
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The chief occupations of the Dacians were agriculture, apiculture, viticulture, livestock, ceramics and metalworking. |
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It found a new niche in luxury items like ceramics, glassware, lace and silk as well an experiencing a temporary rebirth in the woolen industry. |
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The vitrified, translucent ceramic known as porcelain was invented in China during the Tang, although many types of glazed ceramics preceded it. |
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He protected Botticelli, Michelangelo, Filippino Lippi, Bartolomeo Scala, and in 1494 he founded a workshop of ceramics at Cafaggiolo. |
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Metallic ceramics are polycrystalline materials that are rapidly gaining importance. |
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There are also a great many examples of Maya text found on stelae and ceramics. |
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Traditional crafts such as weaving, ceramics, and basketry continued to be practised. |
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Little is known of Maya merchants, although they are depicted on Maya ceramics in elaborate noble dress. |
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Trade goods carried included cacao, obsidian, ceramics, textiles, food and drink for the crew, and copper bells and axes. |
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Maya ceramics were painted with clay slips blended with minerals and coloured clays. |
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In excess of 10,000 individual texts have been recovered, mostly inscribed on stone monuments, lintels, stelae and ceramics. |
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Although not much is known about Maya scribes, some did sign their work, both on ceramics and on stone sculpture. |
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Most recent cultures that lived there have left evidence of the refinement in their ceramics, and huacas or ruins that still stand today. |
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Aco and Quilco specialise in ceramics and San Agustin de Cajas in hats of sheep wool. |
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Marco Meniketti, tested ceramics from shipwrecks in Mexico, California, and Oregon as well as ceramics linked to Drake found near Point Reyes. |
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The Moche culture from Northern Peru made ceramics from earth, water, and fire. |
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This might cover metalwork, ceramics, glass, arms and armour, and a wide range of objects. |
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Chinese ceramics made mainly for export go back to the Tang dynasty if not earlier, though initially they may not be regarded as porcelain. |
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The ceramics of this area have distinctive, very intricate, mostly geometric designs, which are painted on by hand. |
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Sintering happens naturally in mineral deposits or as a manufacturing process used with metals, ceramics, plastics, and other materials. |
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The microstructure and grain size of the ceramics may vary depending on the material and method used. |
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The mill was restored in the 1970s and is now a pottery studio producing handmade ceramics. |
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It later grew through acquisitions in refractories, clays, ceramic bodies and technical ceramics. |
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Agateware are simulations of natural agate stones and these coloured ceramics create an optical illusion. |
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I also love strolling around Chinatown to shop for things like ceramics. |
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The literature remains deficient, however, in long-term studies assessing the use of third generation ceramics in osteonecrotic patients. |
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Don't miss the Gypsy Market for shoes and ceramics on Saturday or a trip to the Aquashow with Europe's biggest watercoaster. |
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The artefact assemblages consisted primarily of chipped stone items and ceramics. |
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Rado has pioneered the use of number of materials unique to watch making, like hardmetal, ceramics, lanthanum and sapphire crystal. |
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The company also has ceramics, plastics, research and development and glassmaking operations in Worcester, Northboro and Milford. |
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The emphasis is on crafts, with numerous and varied examples of ceramics, textiles, basketry, and stone carving. |
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Paintings, drawings, linocuts, woodcuts, collographs, photographs, sculptures, ceramics, textiles and glass are all acceptable. |
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The market offers a range of handmade gifts including ceramics, candles, glasswork, jewellery and Christmas decorations. |
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The handcrafted Esther pot shows what happens when handmade ceramics rise above the grannyish rap and truly shine. |
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There will be wooden items, such as bird tables, as well as clay works, glass fusions and bespoke ceramics. |
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Donath, Reaction of tissue to calcium phosphate ceramics, in Osseo-Integrated Implants, CRC press, Bocal Raton, Vol. |
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The Bigot Pavilion, showcasing the work of ceramics artist Alexandre Bigot. |
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Notable Italian designers included Galileo Chini, whose ceramics were inspired both by majolica patterns and by Art Nouveau. |
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In the Art Nouveau ceramics quickly moved into the domain of sculpture and architecture. |
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One of the pioneer French Art Nouveau ceramists was Ernest Chaplet, whose career in ceramics spanned thirty years. |
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In Nyaunggan, Burma, bronze tools have been excavated along with ceramics and stone artifacts. |
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It takes its name from the township of Canegrate where, in the 20th century, some fifty tombs with ceramics and metal objects were found. |
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However, archaeological evidence from the lowland site at Poulton has shown extensive evidence of metal working and ceramics. |
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This superplasticity of the alloy allows it to be molded using die casts made of ceramics and cement. |
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All Neolithic sites in Europe contain ceramics, The only domesticate not from Southwest Asia was broomcorn millet, domesticated in East Asia. |
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They cleared the forests to establish pasture and to cultivate the land and developed new technologies such as ceramics and textile production. |
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They spent many years traveling in Europe collecting ceramics which she bequeathed to the Victoria and Albert Museum. |
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While the risk to those working in ceramics is now much reduced, it can still not be ignored. |
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It was launched in 1972 and, with new designs added periodically, is still made today, the most successful ceramics series of botanical subjects. |
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In the 1930s, Susan studied ceramics with Bernard and David Leach while she was at Dartington Hall School. |
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The Dudson Centre in Hanley is a museum of the family ceramics business, which is partly housed in a Grade II listed bottle kiln. |
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Portmeirion is based in Stoke town, and now owns the Spode and Royal Worcester ceramics brands. |
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It contains a collection of fine ceramics, a rotating programme of exhibitions and a permanent collection. |
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Mud that is mostly clay, or a mixture of clay and sand may be used for ceramics, of which one form is the common fired brick. |
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Since the transformation is accompanied by a significant change in volume, it can easily induce fracturing of ceramics or rocks passing through this temperature limit. |
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The organisers provided the raw materials needed to get started including, for those interested in ceramics, the opportunity to hand glaze raku pottery tiles. |
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Potters fired ceramics of this type in saggars within a coal-fuelled kiln. |
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Art Nouveau ceramics were also influenced by traditional and modern Japanese and Chinese ceramics, whose vegetal and floral motifs fitted well with the Art Nouveau style. |
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Vroom first outlines the context in which the ceramics under study were collected, namely the Boeotia Project, directed by John Bintliff and Anthony Snodgrass. |
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Non-steel materials of gauge blocks are increasingly gaining its popularity, among them especially oxygen ceramics with its mechanical properties being close to the steel. |
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In France, Art Nouveau ceramics sometimes crossed the line into sculpture. |
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Although agriculture remained important, industries such as weaving, metallurgy, sugar refining, ceramics, and shipbuilding were introduced and developed. |
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Raya Stern says that in her ceramics she expresses her femininity and softness best, which otherwise is hidden under her tomboyishness and her hyperactive energy. |
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Major industries include textiles, pharmaceuticals, shipbuilding, steel, electronics, energy, construction materials, chemicals, ceramics, food processing, and leather goods. |
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For example, composite materials, combining metals with ceramics, have been developed for HP turbine blades, which run at the maximum cycle temperature. |
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Intercrural intercourse is frequently seen on ancient Greek ceramics. |
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The ground floor contains galleries that include glass, ceramics and designer jewellery from established British and Welsh artists, as well as a local painter. |
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Sweet potatoes or camotes are often found in Moche ceramics. |
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A direct result of the Roman retreat was the disappearance of imported products like ceramics and coins, and a return to virtually unchanged local Iron Age production methods. |
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The shapes and range of uses for ceramics and pottery expanded beyond simple vessels to store and carry to specialized cooking utensils, pot stands and rat traps. |
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Building materials can include bricks, cinder and concrete blocks, cement, plaster, ceramics, fiberglass, abrasives, cleaning and face powders, and commercial sands. |
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Integrated geological, petrologic and geochemical approach to establish source material and technology of late Cypriot Bronze Age Plain White ware ceramics. |
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Young-Jae explores the concept of ritual whether throwing ceramics on a wheel or the act of offering cups often filled with wine in shamanist and Confucian rites. |
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The potential utilization of two-stage sintering for the production of highly dense and pure nickel diniobate ceramics with low firing temperature was demonstrated. |
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Reduction of this process is key for many engineering ceramics. |
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More recently Wari and Tiwanaku ceramics have been favourites. |
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Nearly 30 craftspeople will be selling handmade jewellery, clothing, accessories, cards, skin products, soaps, ceramics, home decor, Christmas decorations and more. |
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Its minerals have many applications in everyday life, including construction, hygiene products, paper, paint, plastic, ceramics, telecommunications and beverage filtration. |
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For many, oriental asymmetry was a liberation, and sharawaggi became a cult term of praise when talking about everything from ceramics to buildings. |
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Trade with other parts of Asia such as India and China flourished as early as the 4th century, as evidenced by Chinese ceramics found on the island dated to that period. |
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Empirically, the temperature dependence of Young's elastic modulus for most ceramics is relatively simple, generally decreasing monotonically with increasing temperature. |
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Handoga, dated to the fourth millennium BP, has in turn yielded obsidian microliths and plain ceramics used by early nomadic pastoralists with domesticated cattle. |
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The remaining artifacts are ceramics, bronze articles and an armory. |
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The area of current Lombardy was settled at least since the 2nd millennium BC, as shown by the archaeological findings of ceramics, arrows, axes and carved stones. |
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Local artists and craftspeople will be displaying their wares including toys, ceramics, jewellery, paintings, cupcakes and textiles between 10am and 2pm. |
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In Chinese ceramics the period was one of expansion, with the great innovation the development in Jingdezhen ware of underglaze painted blue and white pottery. |
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Typically ferroelectric ceramics, such as lead zirconate titanate,, lead titanate and barium titanate have been used as the transducer material in such sensors. |
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The site's ware is characterized by punctate and incision geometric designs, which bear a similarity to the Sabir culture phase 1 ceramics from Ma'layba in Southern Arabia. |
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It also boasts sculptures, paintings and ceramics made by its creator. |
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In a culture without a written language, ceramics portrayed the basic scenes of everyday life, including the smelting of metals, relationships and scenes of tribal warfare. |
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Chicago's bold move into the lavish ceramics and textiles that characterized her own take on Finish Fetish was signposted by her earlier use of industrial processes. |
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Greek and Etruscan artists built on the artistic foundations of Egypt, further developing the arts of sculpture, painting, architecture, and ceramics. |
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Painting on the pottery of Ancient Greece and ceramics gives a particularly informative glimpse into the way society in Ancient Greece functioned. |
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